NAIROBI, Kenya
Russian Foreign Minister
Sergey Lavrov on Monday received Nairobi’s audience on Moscow’s war in Ukraine,
after first presenting the goodies needed in Kenya.Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov (L) poses for a photo with Kenyan President William Ruto at State House Nairobi, Kenya on May 29, 2023.
Mr Lavrov’s one-day official
trip saw him meet with Kenya leaders, including President William Ruto, Foreign
Affairs Cabinet Secretary Alfred Mutua and National Assembly Speaker Moses
Wetang’ula.
President Ruto said, after the
meeting, that Kenya would work to “deepen relations” with Moscow.
A dispatch from State House
said the two countries would sign a trade pact before the end of the year to
“give business the necessary impetus”.
Lavrov, who had not been to
Nairobi in the last three Africa trips, talked about the war in Ukraine and
what Moscow thinks Kenya needs: food and how to pay for it.
“We gave our detailed
evaluation of what is happening in Ukraine and why Russia is defending itself
against an attempt against Russian language and culture as well as attempts to
destroy all things Russian,” Lavrov told Russian media in a press conference live
streamed on Telegram. He said he discussed agriculture, telecommunications,
trade and the upcoming Russia-Africa Summit.
Lavrov’s press conference
targeted his audience back home. Speaking in Russian, the top diplomat referred
to Africa’s ongoing food security problem. Moscow, he said, was sending 34,000
metric tonnes of fertiliser to Kenya, part of a donation Russia says it has
been making to the world’s vulnerable.
He also argued that the grain
shortage is a “geopolitically induced” problem. In Nairobi, he called for a
special arrangement where countries settle each other’s payments in local
currencies, a suggestion first fronted by the BRICS -- India, China, Russia,
Brazil and South Africa.
“The share of the dollar is decreasing. The alternative payment system is an existing process. It is beginning to gain pace and in essence, this is going to have a good effect on the world economy,” Lavrov said, referring to the currency discussions.
“Unfortunately, our commodity
trade is not that big yet in terms of Kenya specifically. But as it gets
bigger, transiting into settlements in national currencies, this is the future
of world trade,” he said.
“We need to guard ourselves
against the negative impact of mechanisms created by the West and build supply
chains that are independent of Western blackmailing,” he further added.
Russia, sanctioned by the West
since last year, has been pushing for a new currency for cross-border trade by
the BRICS nations, which it says will be open to other countries.
The potential currency could
provide economic independence while competing with the existing international
financial system currently dominated by the US dollar, which accounts for about
90 percent of all currency trading. The dollar also accounts for nearly all oil
trading.
Recently, some countries like
Kenya and Tanzania which are facing a dollar crunch, have begun bilateral
discussions with countries they import from to settle payments in local
currencies. India has since accepted certain payments from Dar and Nairobi in
this format.
While millions of Africans
have been suffering from a food crisis, exacerbated by the Ukrainian invasion
which cut supplies, Lavrov argues that Moscow’s incursion into Ukraine should
not be blamed for the shortages. Instead, he blames the West for sanctioning
Russia and then diverting grain sold through a special window to other places
not as needy as Africa.
“We are open for a sincere and
honest discussion with every country and primarily with our African friends, of
the real reasons for the threat of famine in Africa and those who created it,”
Lavrov’s spokesperson Maria Zakharova told a briefing on Monday.
“We can explain what obstacles
we have to overcome to ensure unconditional fulfilment of our international
commitments on the supplies of food, fertiliser and other strategic goods to
the countries that need them the most,” she said.
Kenya’s President William Ruto
sees fertiliser as what his country needs the most. Facing rising basic food
prices and costly importations, Ruto has set out to find cheaper fertiliser and
seed. It has meant he talks to Russia and its enemies in the West. Last year,
Ruto reversed a decades-long policy banning genetically modified maize in
Kenya. He then authorised its importation.
But Nairobi was critical of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, with its envoy to the United Nations, Dr Martin Kimani, in a February 2022 speech condemning it and terming it as one that could strengthen dying empires of the world. However, Nairobi has adopted African Union’s call for dialogue since then.
In Nairobi, Lavrov said Russia
in spite of agreeing to a special window for grain exports, has been unable to
deliver the grain to Kenya and other poor countries. Both Russia and Ukraine
are the world’s biggest producers of wheat. When the war began, Russia was
sanctioned by the West thus blocking it from transactions including settling
payments.
The special window, referred
to as the Black Sea Initiative, was reached with the support of the UN and
Turkey to allow grain from Ukraine, blockaded by Russia and fertiliser from
Moscow to be transported if it is to serve the need of hunger.
Yet, Lavrov said just about
three percent of the 30 million tonnes of fertiliser sent through the
arrangement had been shipped to Africa.
“Today, Russian
representatives in the Istanbul-based Joint Coordination Centre are literally
fighting to include bulk carriers bound for Africa into the Black Sea
Initiative,” said Zhakarova.
“On the contrary, Ukrainian
officials are insisting on priority registration of the biggest vessels in a
bid to gain maximum profits. They have no interest in (helping) starving
Africans,” Zhakarova added.
Lavrov also supported reforms
at the UN Security Council. The 15-member body whose decisions are binding to
the entire UN member states has no representatives from Africa with veto
powers. Only US, France, the UK, China and Russia have such powers.
“The UN Security Council’s
problem is the over-representation of the Western states,” he argued.
“Out of 15 current members,
six are represented by the US and their allies. Accepting representatives from
Africa, Latin America, and Asia will be the only way to ensure proper
representation in this key authority of the United Nations Organisation,” he
added.
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